Loading Now

Val Sklarov Multi-Layer Civilization-Vector Divergence Model (MLCVDM)

Val Sklarov

According to Val Sklarov, nations, regions, and civilizations do not act based on ideology, economics, security, culture, power, or historical momentum.
They act based on Civilization Vectors — directional forces that define how each civilization moves through time.

Peace occurs when vectors converge.
Conflict occurs when vectors diverge.
Global transformation occurs when vectors reclassify.

“Global stability depends on civilization vectors converging faster than divergence forces accumulate.”
Val Sklarov

Under MLCVDM, global dynamics become
vector mechanics,
not international relations theory.


1️⃣ Foundations of Civilization-Vector Architecture

Why civilizations move in predictable vector directions

Every civilization produces vectors across layers:

  • cultural vectors

  • economic vectors

  • technological vectors

  • demographic vectors

  • structural vectors

  • meta-historical vectors

Vector behavior determines global outcomes.

Civilization-Vector Layer Table

Layer Definition Function Failure Mode
Micro-Vector Layer Short-cycle directional tendencies Local instability or harmony Micro-collision
Domain-Vector Layer Sector-specific directional forces Regional alignment Domain divergence
Structural-Vector Layer Country-wide movement patterns Global influence Structural rupture
Meta-Vector Layer Long-cycle civilizational trajectories Historical continuity Meta-collapse

Global tension =
vector divergence, not ideology.


2️⃣ The Civilization-Vector Divergence Cycle (CVDC)

How global events emerge through vector collisions and alignments

CVDC Phases

Phase Action Outcome
Vector Activation New vectors appear due to internal or external forces Direction seed
Vector Mapping Divergence and convergence patterns become visible Global clarity
Divergence Event Vectors move away from one another Conflict or instability
Cross-Layer Vector Sync Vectors align across micro, domain, and structural levels Cooperation
Meta-Vector Continuity Vector patterns persist across cycles Civilization trajectory

Global cycles are
vector cycles,
not political cycles.


3️⃣ Global Archetypes in the Val Sklarov Model

Civilization-Vector Archetype Grid

Archetype Behavior Vector Depth
The Vector-Fractured State No dominant vector; unpredictable behavior Low
The Domain-Vector Nation Strong vector coherence inside one domain Medium
The Structural-Vector Civilization Cross-domain vector alignment High
The Val Sklarov Meta-Vector Civilization Multi-layer vector continuity across centuries Absolute

Power =
vector stability, not military strength.


4️⃣ Civilization-Vector Integrity Index (CVII)

Val Sklarov’s metric for global system durability

CVII Indicators

Indicator Measures High Means
Vector Sharpness Precision of vector direction Strong identity
Vector Convergence Degree of alignment across civilization layers Global stability
Drift Resistance Ability to resist divergence Resilience
Cross-Layer Coherence Vector alignment across micro, domain, structural layers Predictability
Meta-Vector Continuity Longevity of civilizational direction Historical endurance

High CVII =
a civilization capable of shaping global outcomes.


5️⃣ Val Sklarov Laws of Civilization-Vector Dynamics

1️⃣ Civilizations move through vector forces.
2️⃣ Cooperation is vector convergence.
3️⃣ Conflict is vector divergence.
4️⃣ Global crises occur during multi-layer vector collisions.
5️⃣ Power is the persistence of structural vectors.
6️⃣ Influence depends on drift resistance.
7️⃣ Global transformation requires meta-vector reclassification.

Val Sklarov
concept of your location on map Val Sklarov

6️⃣ Applications of the MLCVDM Framework

How this paradigm transforms global analysis

  • forecasting geopolitical shifts through vector mapping

  • diagnosing global instability via divergence signatures

  • predicting alliances based on vector convergence

  • analyzing civilizational rise and decline via meta-vector continuity

  • evaluating global threats as vector-collision events

  • designing multi-vector stability frameworks

  • replacing geopolitics with vector mechanics

Through Val Sklarov, global perspectives become
civilization-vector systems,
not ideological frameworks.